Find Dreams in Each Other’s Gridlock
The following is a list of gridlocked issues that other people have had in their relationships. In this exercise, see if you can imagine and identify a dream within each position.
Make up a story, or narrative, for each side of the gridlock. In each case, imagine that this is your position and that it is very hard for you to yield on this position. Think of what your position might mean to you. Also imagine where this dream may come from in your own pretend past life. Doing this will eventually help you with your own gridlocked conflict.
For the first two issues, the narrative story about the dream within the conflict is included. For the remainder of the issues, add your own pretend narrative story. One suggested narrative is at the end of the exercise.
Gridlocked Position Example A:
I want to save money so that we can have an investment portfolio for our later years. My partner wants to spend money and not live for tomorrow. My partner objects to having a sizeable savings plan. I think that my partner is impractical and thoughtless.
Here’s a story that illustrates the dream within this conflict:
I grew up living with my grandmother, who was a fine person. However, she and my mother just did not get along. So in her later years, my grandmother had very little control of her own life, and she had to endure a lot of indignities just so she could have a roof over her head. I feel that I am a lot like her. When I become old I want to have the control over my life that she never had. I want to be able to live as I want to live, not extravagantly, but with dignity and some measure of control. Depending on my health, this will take some money set aside, and some planning. But I feel I need this to be secure right now that everything will be okay when I become old.
Gridlocked Example B:
I want to spend a reasonably large portion of our income, close to 10 percent, on charitable contributions. My partner objects to this because we do not have much of a savings plan ourselves. My partner thinks my insistence on this is
impractical and thoughtless.
Here’s a story that illustrates the dream within this conflict:
My family, the Johnsons, have a heritage of giving money to the poor and of spending part of every week doing something for the poor. My mother ran a soup kitchen, for example. I have always worked in a soup kitchen in our local church. I decided long ago to tithe, and that is a part of my identity. It is my link to my family tradition. I can’t give in on this issue because I would be betraying something that I believe in, I would be betraying myself. My dream is
to lead a moral life in what I see as a basically selfish and cruel world.
Now add a pretend narrative story that could illustrate the dream within each of the following conflicts. In each case, imagine that this is your position, and that it is very hard for you to yield on this position. Think of what your position might mean to you. Find the dream within the position. Also think about where this dream may come from in your own pretend past life.
Examples of Gridlocked Problems:
Gridlocked Position #1:
My partner is overly neat and tidy, in my opinion. I like a certain amount of order and neatness in our home, but not as much as my partner insists upon. I find myself constantly trying to find things after my partner has cleaned up. I think my partner is being inconsiderate, and overly controlling, and I am tired of this.
My story that illustrates the dream within this conflict might be:
Gridlocked Position #2:
I like a certain amount of order and neatness in our home. I find myself constantly cleaning up my partner’s messes. I think my partner is being inconsiderate, and I am tired of this.
My story that illustrates the dream within this conflict might be:
Gridlocked Position #3:
My partner has an issue with jealousy. I think that at parties and other places it is the time to meet new people, and I find this very interesting. My partner hangs on and is overly shy. My partner claims that I look at other people and act
flirtatious, but this isn’t true at all. I find this insulting, and it makes me angry. I don’t know how to reassure my partner, and I am tired of trying. This is affecting trust between us.
My story that illustrates the dream within this conflict might be:
Gridlocked Position #4:
I have an issue with jealousy. I think that at parties and other places my partner looks at other people and acts in a flirtatious manner. I find this insulting and demeaning. I have brought this up repeatedly and cannot get my partner to stop.
My story that illustrates the dream within this conflict might be:
Gridlocked Position #5:
My partner is an overly emotional person and claims that I am far too unemotional. This difference between us makes me feel that my partner is over-reactive and out of control at times, perhaps overly sensitive. I think that being rational is usually the best approach to strong emotional situations, not getting more emotional. My partner claims that I am hard to read and too distant.
My story that illustrates the dream within this conflict might be:
Gridlocked Position #6:
I am a very emotional person, and my partner is far too unemotional. This difference between us makes me feel that my partner is cold and fake at times, not really present. Many times I have no idea what my partner is thinking or feeling. I am frustrated by this difference between us.
My story that illustrates the dream within this conflict might be:
Gridlocked Position #7:
My partner needs a lot of time alone, but I think in a relationship it is important to spend our free time doing things together. I find it hard to get this need met and feel like my partner really doesn’t have too much interest in being with
- I am called dependent by my partner for wanting to be intimate in this relationship.
My story that illustrates the dream within this conflict might be:
Gridlocked Position #8:
I need a lot of time alone, but my partner keeps wanting to spend all of our free time doing things together. I find this dependent and cloying and resent not getting enough time just to do things that I like, by myself or with friends.
My story that illustrates the dream within this conflict might be:
Gridlocked Position #9:
My partner likes to have sex much more often than I do. I don’t know what to do when my partner keeps approaching me for sexual intimacy. I don’t know how to say “No” in a gentle way. This pattern makes me feel like an ogre. I don’t
know how to deal with this.
My story that illustrates the dream within this conflict might be:
Gridlocked Position #10:
I like to have sex much more often than my partner. I keep getting my feelings hurt when I approach my partner for sexual intimacy and get turned down. This pattern makes me feel unattractive and unwanted. I don’t know how to deal with this.
My story that illustrates the dream within this conflict might be:
Gridlocked Position #11:
We have different styles of wanting to make love. When we try to talk about these differences I keep feeling frustrated. I try to explain the things I need for sex to feel more like making love, but these things seem never to get through to
my partner.
My story that illustrates the dream within this conflict might be:
Gridlocked Position #12:
We have different styles of wanting to make love. When we try to talk about these differences, I keep feeling inadequate. It seems to me that my partner has so many conditions that must be met before we can make love that this will never happen, or it will always be fraught with problems.
My story that illustrates the dream within this conflict might be:
Gridlocked Position #13:
Money has been a gridlocked conflict of ours for some time. I think that my partner is far too stingy when it comes to money and doesn’t believe in spending enough on just enjoying life and having fun. I also resent not having more
personal freedom and control when it comes to money.
My story that illustrates the dream within this conflict might be:
Gridlocked Position #14:
Money has been a gridlocked conflict of ours for some time. I think that my partner is impractical when it comes to money and spends far too thoughtlessly and selfishly.
My story that illustrates the dream within this conflict might be:
Gridlocked Position #15:
My partner likes to stay in much closer touch with our families than I do. To me, family connections are great sources of stress and disappointment. I have broken away from my family, and I want much greater distance.
My story that illustrates the dream within this conflict might be:
Gridlocked Position #16:
I like to stay in much closer touch with my family than my partner does. To me family connections are very important. My partner wants greater independence from our families than I do.
My story that illustrates the dream within this conflict might be:
Gridlocked Position #17:
I am far more introverted than my partner is. I like to spend a lot of quiet time alone. My partner wants to have dinner parties fairly often, have people over a lot, and be more connected to friends than I do. I am more of a loner, more
solitary than my partner. This has been a continual issue between us.
My story that illustrates the dream within this conflict might be:
Gridlocked Position #18:
I am far more extroverted than my partner. I like to have dinner parties fairly often, have people over a lot, and be more connected to friends than my partner does. My partner is more of a loner, more solitary. This has been a continual issue between us.
My story that illustrates the dream within this conflict might be:
Gridlocked Position #19:
I believe in more strict discipline of children than my partner does. I can’t stand kids who are selfish, rude, misbehaved, or disrespectful. I think my partner is soft on our kids and spoils the children. I believe in tough love and that best prepares kids for success in the world.
My story that illustrates the dream within this conflict might be:
Gridlocked Position #20:
My partner believes more in strict discipline of children than I do. I am accused of being soft, of spoiling the children. I believe that love and understanding is the way to approach kids, but my partner was raised a different way and does not agree with my philosophy about raising children.
My story that illustrates the dream within this conflict might be:
Gridlocked Position #21:
My career is very important to me. My partner places much more importance and emphasis on family than I do, and this keeps causing great conflict between us. I think we do enough things together as a couple and family, but my partner constantly complains about this.
My story that illustrates the dream within this conflict might be:
Gridlocked Position #22:
My partner places much more importance and emphasis on career than on family, and this keeps causing great conflict between us. We tend to do very little together as a couple or family because of this.
My story that illustrates the dream within this conflict might be:
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